Last week, Skechers (SKX) presented at UBS Global Consumer and Retail Conference, giving interesting updates on the status of their business and their expectations for the future. I think its worth refreshing our view of the stock and its attractiveness.

Skechers has lived mome

History shows March often a strong month for the stock market

Even though the S&P 500 ended February with a nearly 4% monthly loss, there are seasonal reasons to be optimistic as the calendar flips over.

The good news is that March kicks off two of the strongest months historically for equities, before we hit a period of seasonal weakness from May through October, said Ryan Detrick, senior market strategist at LPL Financial.

February finally cracked the volatility genie out of the bottle, and now the big question is: will he stay out for good, Detrick said. Indeed, besides the volatility that sent shocks throughout financial markets early in February, worries about rising inflation and interest rates led the S&P 500
SPX, -1.11%
as well as the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA, -1.50%
to have their worst monthly performance since January 2016.

Read: Heres why ultralow volatility isnt coming back

But the data shows there could be grounds to be hopeful.

Over the past two decades, March has been the second strongest month for the S&P
SPX, -1.11%
on average. Going back further, all the way to 1950, the index still averages 1.2% growth in March, making it the fourth best month. And April has historically been even stronger.

LPL Research, FactSet March and April have been historically strong months for the S&P 500

This strength has also been reflected in returns, as March raked in 4.1% on average over the past two decades, outdone only by the average October, according to LPL. Going back to 1950, average March returns were 1.3%.

If one is to truly allege that the digital asset is little more than a massive ploy to defraud unwitting investors of their money, la Bernie Madoff, then one must admit that the entire stock market itself is one giant hustle, too.

Last week, Skechers (SKX) presented at UBS Global Consumer and Retail Conference, giving interesting updates on the status of their business and their expectations for the future. I think its worth refreshing our view of the stock and its attractiveness.

In the last few weeks, we have seen two high profile unicorns file for initial public offerings. The first out of the gate was Dropbox (Pending:DBX), a storage solution for a world where gigabyte files are the rule rather than the exception, with a filing on February 23. Following close after,

U.S. stock futures moved sharply higher on Monday, indicating Wall Street may extend gains seen late last week after data showed a strong increase in jobs created, but weaker-than-forecast wages. Dow futures